Progress has been made!!!
My next step was to bore the crankcase for the yet to be made cylinder sleeve. In order to do this I needed to be able to locate the CL of the crank so I made this bushing and pressed it into the end of the crank journal:
Then it was time to do some milling
well... boring.... but it wasn't boring, it was very cathartic.
Until this happened... I was cruising along fine and I must have adjusted my boring head to be a little too unbalanced for my given speed. I began cutting and it suddenly began going down hill very quickly. I don't know if I just hit a harmonic node and could have pushed past it, or If I was just going to be unstable from there out, but I backed off the RPM and everything quieted down. Fortunately this was while I was still hogging material out, so no harm done.
Once the bore was finished, I used the boring head as a single point tool to deck the head. I doubt this is recommended, but it actually worked very well. THe camera makes things look atrocious, but it is an RMS 63 finish or better.
Next, I drilled and tapped the three holes which will secure the cylinder body and head. This was my first time doing anything meaningful with a DRO, and I must say that they are amazing. Anything a DRO can do can be done by hand, but it just made life so much nicer.... I also milled the exhaust port to "length". No direct pictures of these steps, but here is the final product:
One thing I didn't consider in my setup and probably should have was chip clearing. It didn't end up being a problem, but I was running out of room: